1 / 34

Chapter 3

Chapter 3. Cells: The Living Units Organelles and Cell Cycle. Cell Organelles. Cytoplasm Cellular material on the inside of the cell. The cellular region between the nuclear and plasma membrane. Major functional area of the cell. Cell Organelles. Mitochondria

glenna
Télécharger la présentation

Chapter 3

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 3 Cells: The Living Units Organelles and Cell Cycle

  2. Cell Organelles • Cytoplasm • Cellular material on the inside of the cell. The cellular region between the nuclear and plasma membrane. Major functional area of the cell.

  3. Cell Organelles • Mitochondria • “Powerhouse of the cell” – Has a double membrane. Outer membrane smooth. Inner membrane folded inward  forms cristae. Cellular respiration (makes energy) takes place here. Found in cytoplasm.

  4. Cell Organelles • Ribosomes • Protein synthesis takes place here. Either found free or bound to the ER

  5. Cell Organelles • Rough ER • Has ribosomes attached to the membrane. The membrane is continuous with the nuclear membrane. Its acts as a site for protein modification. “membrane factory”

  6. Cell Organelles • Smooth ER • Continuation of the rough ER. No role in protein synthesis. Site of lipid and steroid synthesis, lipid metabolism and drug detoxification. Skeletal and cardiac muscle have very elaborate smooth ER, otherwise other cells don’t really have much smooth ER

  7. Cell Organelles • Golgi Apparatus • “ Traffic director” Packages, modifies, and segregates proteins for secretion from the cell, inclusion in lysosomes and incorporation of the plasma membrane

  8. Cell Organelles • Lysosomes • “ disintegrator bodies” Spherical membranous bags containing digestive enzymes. Packaged by golgi. Sites of intracellular digestion, degrade worn out organelles, and tissues that are no longer useful, and release ionic calcium from bone. Can destroy whole cell!

  9. Cell Organelles • Microtubules • Cylindrical structures made of tubulin proteins. Support the cell and give it shape. Involved in intracellular and cellular movements. Form the centrioles

  10. Cell Organelles • Centrioles • Paired cylindrical bodies, each composed of nine triplets of microtubules. Organize a microtubule network during mitosis to form the spindle and asters. Form the bases of cilia and flagella

  11. Cell Organelles • Vesicle/Vacuole • Used for storage, comes from Golgi

  12. Cell Organelles • Nucleus • Largest organelle. Control center of the cell. Responsible for transmitting genetic information and providing the instructions for protein synthesis

  13. Cell Organelles • Nuclear Membrane • Separates the nucleoplasm from the cytoplasm and regulates passage of substances to and from the nucleus

  14. Cell Organelles • Nucleoli • Makes ribosomes

  15. Cell Organelles • Chromatin • Granular, threadlike material composed of DNA and histone proteins. DNA constitutes the genes.

  16. Cell Cycle • The life cycle of any cell – from the time the cell is formed until the time it goes through cell division • Includes Interphase, Mitosis (prophase, metaphase, anaphase, telophase) and cytokinesis

  17. Interphase • G0 Phase– nonreplicating part of interphase; cells that permanently cease dividing

  18. Interphase • G1 – Most of the growth, function, replication of extra organelles, and cellular development (metabolically active, synthesize proteins rapidly and grow vigorously). Length is variable - can last from minutes to hours. From days to years.

  19. Interphase • S Phase - (synthesis) – DNA is synthesized

  20. Interphase • G2 – enzymes and proteins necessary for cell division are synthesized and moved to their proper sites. Brief. At the end of this phase the cell is ready to divide! 

  21. Cellular Division • Essential for growth and tissue repair (i.e. cuts) • Some cells wear away constantly (i.e. skin, intestinal lining)

  22. Cellular Division • Some cells divide slowly but retain the ability to reproduce quickly if damaged (i.e. liver) • Some cells lose the ability to divide (i.e. nervous tissue, skeletal muscle, and cardiac muscle)

  23. Mitotic Phase – Mitosis • Mitosis  When the replicated DNA is divided into two “new” cells

  24. Mitotic Phase – Mitosis • Early Prophase • Chromatin coils and condenses to form chromosomes. • Because the DNA is replicated, there are two identical chromatids they are held together by the centromere

  25. Early Prophase • Nuceoli disappear • Centrioles start moving to opposite sides of the cell • Spindle fibers (organized by the centrioles) lengthen

  26. Mitotic Phase – Mitosis • Late Prophase • Centrioles still moving • Nuclear membrane disappears • Spindle fibers attach to the centromere (at the kinetochore) • Chromosomes start to be pulled to the middle of the cell

  27. Mitotic Phase – Mitosis • Metaphase • Chromosomes line up along the middle of the cell • Centromeres are lined up at the exact middle of the cell.

  28. Mitotic Phase – Mitosis • Anaphase • Begins when the centromeres are split and chromosomes are pulled to the opposite sides of the cell • The cell starts to lengthen

  29. Mitotic Phase – Mitosis • Telophase • Begins when chromosomes stop moving • Chromosomes uncoil • Nuclear membrane reforms • Nuceoli reappear • Basically prophase in reverse

  30. Mitotic Phase – Cytokinesis • The division of cytoplasm into two separate cells. • Begins during late anaphase and is completed after mitosis (telophase) ends.

  31. Mitotic Phase – Cytokinesis • Plasma membrane is drawn inward to form a cleavage furrow. • Furrow deepens until cytoplasm and cell is pinched into two parts. • There are now two identical cells

More Related